What Stillpoint "Nose"

Pimento Berry Essential oil is similar chemically to Holy Bail Essential Oil or Clove Bud Essential Oil due to the presence of Eugenol. This essential oil is extremely analgesic, warming and anesthetic. We have used it in blends for anything and everything muscular. It is effective against arthritis, rheumatism, muscular aches and pains and stiff joints. It has also been found to be a gentle rubefacient, stimulating circulation and increasing blood flow. Also helpful in relieving pain caused by neuralgia

It is also wonderful for digestive issues. Pimento Berry Essential Oil is carminative. It has been found to be helpful with flatulence and indigestion as well as stomach cramps and spasms.

It is also known to be antiseptic and protective against infections in wounds and cuts.

Traditional Use of Pimento Berry aka Allspice

Botany

The pimento berry tree is classified as an evergreen shrub. This tree can reach 10–18 m (33–59 ft) in height. It can be a small, scrubby tree, quite similar to the bay laurel in size and form. It can also be a tall, canopy tree, sometimes grown to provide shade for coffee trees planted underneath it.

Energetically this oil is supportive of the 2nd chakra, alleviates apathy and depression. Fosters strength and directness when needed in a balanced kind way. Assists in a state of mind of wholeness and completion. Pinto Berry aka allspice is warming to the four bodies - Physical, Emotional, Mental and Spiritual. Think of a cup of spiced cider on a cold winter's night. That is the comfort and support of allspice.

Traditional Folklore

Allspice, is also called Jamaica pepper, pepper, myrtle pepper, pimenta, Turkish Yenibahar, or newspic. It is the dried unripe fruit (berries, used as a spice) of Pimenta dioica, a tree native to the Greater Antilles, southern Mexico, and Central America. The name 'allspice' was coined as early as 1621 by the English, who thought it combined the flavour of cinnamon, nutmeg, and clove

Eugenol belongs to the Phenol chemical family. Phenols are potentially irritating components to the skin and mucous membranes, and they can cause dermatitis and sensitization. If phenols are present in high concentrations in the essential oil, the essential oil should be used in very low dilutions on the skin, diluted well in carrier oil, and only used for short periods of time.

Phenol-high oils are skin irritating if used in a bath.

Use in small amounts when blending phenol-rich oils for diffusing (no more than 10% of the pure essential oil blend).

Phenol-rich oils should not be used on people with skin issues such as dermatitis, or on babies or children.

Oils high in eugenol, thymol or carvacrol inhibits platelet aggregation, and are not to be used by people with blood clotting disorders, by people taking anticoagulant drugs such as aspirin or Warfarin, or before surgery.

Suggested maximum topical use of eugenol is 0.5%. In small doses, eugenol can be liver-protective, however, in high concentrations, it is hepatotoxic and can cause tissue damage.